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AAR Rear brakes

Obash

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I posted previously about sticking rear brakes on my AAR. Today I tried to bleed the Rt Rear brake cylinder. This is the one that has been sticking after driving a couple of miles ( car comes to complete stop without using the brake pedal). I opened the bleeder screw, attached hose to it and pumped the brake pedal several times. Nothing came out the bleeder but when I took the cap off the master cylinder the fluid in the front reservoir was a nasty milky yellow color. I then siphoned the rear brake "chamber", refilled it and tried again, Same issue-yellow/milky fluid in the chamber. took the bleeder screw out completely then pumped the brake and not a drop came out of the wheel cylinder. how do I proceed from this point?
 

Chryco Psycho

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Undo the line to the brake cylinder & see if fluid comes out , if yes replace the cylinder , if not undo the line into the flex hose to the diff & see if you get fluid ther , if not go to the proprtioning valve & see if you get fluid there
 

moparleo

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Also determine what contaminated the fluid. You nay end up replacing every component that uses a rubber seal. Eg wheel cylinders, calipers all 3 flex hoses, master cylinder, rebuild prop valve. Replace/flush out steel lines completely. Personally. the brake system is the most important system on the car, Safety wise.
Preventative maintenance. Star with a new, not rebuilt master cylinder and just replace the complete system including hard lines.
Replacement pre-bent lines are available for nominal money compared to what a brake system failure can cost.
The car is over 50 years old with an unknown history.
Replace and keep fresh/new brake fluid in the system. No wasted time diagnosing something that you can't see into.
Start new and with peace of mind/safety.
 

Challenger RTA

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The above information is good. To start. Drum drum, drum disc or other system.
car comes to complete stop without using the brake pedal
It could be a shoe or caliper hanging up or the paring brake hanging up( Not adjusted correctly). The rubber brake hose or hoses might be bad inside and act as a check valve.
Yes I would say you need to do a complete brake system rebuild. It will be a lot easer then trying to fix a multitude of issues. The use DOT 5.1 brake fluid.
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Obash

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Mar 30, 2025
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Also determine what contaminated the fluid. You nay end up replacing every component that uses a rubber seal. Eg wheel cylinders, calipers all 3 flex hoses, master cylinder, rebuild prop valve. Replace/flush out steel lines completely. Personally. the brake system is the most important system on the car, Safety wise.
Preventative maintenance. Star with a new, not rebuilt master cylinder and just replace the complete system including hard lines.
Replacement pre-bent lines are available for nominal money compared to what a brake system failure can cost.
The car is over 50 years old with an unknown history.
Replace and keep fresh/new brake fluid in the system. No wasted time diagnosing something that you can't see into.
Start new and with peace of mind/safety.
Thanks for the advice. Any recommendations as to which brake line kit works best? Stainless steel or original type?
 
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